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Many insects harbor microbial symbiotic partners that offer protection against pathogens, parasitoids, and other natural enemies. Mounting evidence suggests that these symbiotic microbes can play key roles in determining infection outcomes in insect vectors, making them important players in the quest to develop novel vector control strategies. Using the squash bug , we investigated how the presence of symbionts affected the persistence and intensity of phytopathogenic Serratia marcescens within the insect vector. We reared insects aposymbiotically and with different isolates, infected them with S. marcescens, and then sampled the insects periodically to assess the intensity and persistence of pathogen infection. Squash bugs harboring consistently had much lower-intensity infections and cleared S. marcescens significantly faster than their aposymbiotic counterparts. These patterns held even when we reversed the timing of exposure to symbiont and pathogen. Taken together, these results indicate that symbionts play an essential role in S. marcescens infection outcomes in squash bugs and could be used to alter vector competence to enhance agricultural productivity in the future. Insect-microbe symbioses have repeatedly been shown to profoundly impact an insect's ability to vector pathogens to other hosts. The use of symbiotic microbes to control insect vector populations is of growing interest in agricultural settings. Our study examines how symbiotic microbes affect the dynamics of a plant pathogen infection within the squash bug vector , a well-documented pest of squash and other cucurbit plants and a vector of Serratia marcescens, the causative agent of cucurbit yellow vine disease. We provide evidence that the symbiont prevents successful, long-term establishment of S. marcescens in the squash bug. These findings give us insight into symbiont-pathogen dynamics within the squash bug that could ultimately determine its ability to transmit pathogens and be leveraged to interrupt disease transmission in this system.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01550-21 | DOI Listing |
J Econ Entomol
August 2025
Department of Entomology, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA, USA.
Current pest management decisions for squash bug, Anasa tristis (Hemiptera: Coreidae), a key cucurbit pest in North America, are based on counts of adults and egg masses. Nymphs contribute strongly to crop damage and are the life stage most vulnerable to insecticides, and therefore are considered an important target for effective chemical-based integrated pest management. In order to identify which life stage most accurately predicts future yield, we evaluated the relationship between different squash bug life stages and marketable summer squash yield.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Biol
July 2025
Biology Department, Emory University, 1510 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 303220, USA.
Symbiotic interactions, central to most life on Earth, are interwoven associations that vary in intimacy and duration. Some of the most well-known examples of symbioses occur between animals and gut bacteria. These associations lead to physiological integration of host and symbionts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Environ Microbiol
October 2024
Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Unlabelled: Specialized host-microbe symbioses are ecological communities, whose composition is shaped by various processes. Microbial community assembly in these symbioses is determined in part by interactions between taxa that colonize ecological niches available within habitat patches. The outcomes of these interactions, and by extension the trajectory of community assembly, can display priority effects-dependency on the order in which taxa first occupy these niches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Dis
January 2025
Department of Plant Pathology, Entomology and Microbiology, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011, U.S.A.
Cucurbit yellow vine disease (CYVD), which is caused by the gram-negative bacterium and transmitted by squash bugs ( DeGeer), is a devastating disease of cucurbit crops that is emerging rapidly in the eastern half of the United States. The lack of a robust pathogenicity assay for CYVD in the laboratory has hampered functional tests using genomic sequences to investigate the biology of this phytopathogen. In this study we developed and validated a bioassay that yielded consistent and quantifiable CYVD symptoms on squash in the laboratory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Biol
April 2024
Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
Specialized host-microbe symbioses canonically show greater diversity than expected from simple models, both at the population level and within individual hosts. To understand how this heterogeneity arises, we utilize the squash bug, Anasa tristis, and its bacterial symbionts in the genus Caballeronia. We modulate symbiont bottleneck size and inoculum composition during colonization to demonstrate the significance of ecological drift, the noisy fluctuations in community composition due to demographic stochasticity.
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